Writers Reading Writers: Intertextual Studies in Medieval and Early Modern Literature in Honor of Robert Hollander

Front Cover
University of Delaware Press, 2007 - 255 pages
This volume is a collection of intertextual studies on medieval and early modern literature in honor of Robert Hollander by some of his former students. Writers are always also readers, responding to texts that have provoked their thought. The contributors to this volume all participate in its overarching theme: writers reading and responding to the work of other writers. As Hollander's work has focused especially on Dante and Boccaccio, many of the essays treat one of these writers, either as reading or as read by others. Other essays trace intertextual influences in Langland, Shakespeare, or post-Enlightenment writers faced with the loss of Dante's meaningful cosmos.
 

Contents

Dantes Exile and Some Metamorphic Nomenclature in Hell
21
Philomela Procne and the Song of the Penitent in Dantes Purgatorio
40
Pagan Vision and Poetic Revisions
58
Dante and the Dilemma of Judgment
73
Reading Ovid through Dante in the House of Fame Book 3
89
Oerpressed Spirits in Shakespeares Pericles
109
Ernst Robert Curtius and Dante as a Reader of Medieval Latin Authors
133
Did Langland Read the Lignum Vitae?
149
Classical and Vernacular Narrative Models for Art Biography in Vasaris Lives
183
Maggis Griselda di Saluzzo
201
Reading the PostEnlightenment Universe
225
Contributors
247
Index
251
Commedia Index
Copyright

Other editions - View all

Common terms and phrases

Popular passages

Page 21 - Poi che fu piacere de li cittadini de la bellissima e famosissima figlia di Roma, Fiorenza, di gittarmi fuori del suo dolce seno — nel quale nato e nutrito fui in fino al colmo de la vita mia...
Page 23 - ... multas esse perpendimus firmiterque censemus et magis nobiles et magis delitiosas et regiones et urbes quam Tusciam et Florentiam, unde sumus oriundus et civis, et plerasque nationes et gentes delectabiliori atque utiliori sermone uti quam Latinos.

About the author (2007)

Robert Hollander is the author of a dozen monographs, editions, and translations and some six dozen articles on Dante, Boccaccio, and other writers. A member of Princeton's Department of Romance Languages and the former chairman of its Department of Comparative Literature, he has received the Gold Medal of the city of Florence in recognition of his Dante scholarship.

Bibliographic information